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Date. Acquiring bank. Acquired bank. Purchase price. Sept. 30, 1998. Bank of America. NationsBank. $62 billion. July 1, 2004. J.P. Morgan Chase. Bank One. $58 billion
Stephen A. Rhoades, "Bank Mergers and Industrywide Structure, 1980–1994," Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reanuary 1996. (Staff study 169) Steven J. Pilloff, "Bank Merger Activity in the United States, 1994–2003," Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, May 2004. (Staff study 176)
Mergers are shown as the market value of the combined entities. ... Mitsui Bank [72] Taiyo Kobe Bank: 22.8 56 3 1989 Warner Communications [73] Time Inc. 15.2 37.4 4
A corporate acquisition can be structured legally as either an "asset purchase" in which the seller sells business assets and liabilities to the buyer, an "equity purchase" in which the buyer purchases equity interests in a target company from one or more selling shareholders or a "merger" in which one legal entity is combined into another ...
Swiss Bank Corporation: S. G. Warburg & Co. Swiss Bank Corporation: 1995 Dresdner Bank: Kleinwort Benson: Dresdner Kleinwort Benson: 1996 Chemical Bank: Chase Manhattan Bank: Chase Manhattan Bank: 1996 Morgan Stanley: Van Kampen American Capital: Morgan Stanley: 1997 Bankers Trust: Alex. Brown & Sons: Bankers Trust (BT Alex. Brown & Sons) 1997 ...
Lists of corporate mergers and acquisitions include both takeovers and mergers of corporations. Most are organized by the main company involved in the transactions. Most are organized by the main company involved in the transactions.
Bulge bracket banks are the world's largest global investment banks, [2] serving mostly large corporations, institutional investors and governments.The term "Bulge Bracket" comes from the way investment banks are listed on the "tombstone", or public notification of a financial transaction, [3] where the largest advisors on investment banking operations (mergers, acquisitions, IPOs, or debt ...
This is a list of notable financial institutions worldwide that were severely affected by the Great Recession centered in 2007–2009. The list includes banks (including savings and loan associations, commercial banks and investment banks), building societies and insurance companies that were: